The Summerville news. (Summerville, Chattooga County, Ga.) 1896-current, November 11, 1909, Image 7

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HINTON & COMPANY. We Feel Good I Cotton 14c and cotton seed 50c bushel which | makes a bale of cotton bring about 185.00. That is | fine and we feel mighty good over it. Never saw a time in our business when things | looked better for us all. We have a store full of | the choicest goods bought at low prices and now is | the best time you will have to buy your goods, for goods will be 25 per cent higher very soon as sure 9 as the night follows the day. « • I Linen Towels and Napkins | Are things in our store that are very important line. At 25 j 50c and up $1.50 per yard our table linen are as fine $ values as can be had. h TOWELS—Cotton, at 5, 10 and 15c, big enough for a quilt | if you don’t want the quilt too large. TOWELS—Linen, at 25, 35 and 50c great big ones smooth as glass fringed or hemmed. Dress Linings | Ladiesc —do you have any trouble'about getting the kind of K dress linings to match your dresses etc. We carry the best stock of Honings to be had, at fro m 10c e9 yard up to 50c, in all the colors. BUTTONS I How about getting buttons to match your dresses and $ etc. we can match any piece of dress good in our store or the other fellow store either in the different size buttons. Jet | battons and ormament are being used great deal this season. | We have a fine stock of them. Braid / For trimmings, we have in a big assortment. Hosiery * We carry perhaps as much Hosiery as the rest of the town put together. We buy all our Hosiery from the fac tories. You are sure to get fresh new goods CHILDREN’S at 10, 15 25c, We honestly believe no store gives better values, in small or large ribbed. We can fit the children if you give us their age or size of shoe worn. LADIE’S HOSIERY—We use the best judgement in se lecting the different kinds, avoiding the ones with seams and badly shaped. The Burson Hose is the best 25 cent ladies hose on the market. Has not a seam in it, toe, heel or leg- We sell the Fay Stockings for children- and ladies. Chil drens two grades, 25 and 35 cents, ladies 25c. Sweater Coat* Within the last few days we have received $200.00 worth of of these useful garments for ladies, misses and children. The ladies comes in three lengths 25 30and 34 inches, single or double breasted, with great big fine peaal buttons, all wool, tip top in every respect. Ladies comes in white, red ank gray at from $1.50 to $4.50. Misses and childrens comes in white brown, and red at from $1.50 to SB.OO. Wool Rolls A good customer of ours brought us a fresh lot of woo) rolls this week. 60 cents per pouud. We are paying 25 eents per dozzen for eggs. Everybody come to see us, want to show you how we are selling goods these days. Terms: Cash. AH Good* Delivered. Hinton & Company . THE SUMMERVILLE NEWS T HURSDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 1909 I LOCAL NEWS, I | Col. C. D. Rivers spent Tuesday . I in Rome. Miss Kate McWhorter is recov- ' I ering from a recent illness. j I All kinds of fruits and vegetables | |at the Depot Restaurant. Phone 70. ' Mr. T. P. Henry spent Tuesday in I Lafayette. Dr. W. J. Bryant made a business i trip to Gore Wednesday. Seed Appier Oats for sale at 75 . I cents per bushel. —B. F. Weesner. ■ Mrs. B. F. Weesner and daughter, ; of Dirttown, were the guests of j friends in Summerville Wednesday. , i Mr. Carl Wilson arrived last week from Menglewood, Tenn., and is vis ! i iting his parents, Mr. and Mrs. G. i II J. Wilson. Mr. J. N. Rush returned Tuesday evening from Cherokee county, Ala., where he went to attend the funeral I of his sister, Mrs. George Skene. Messrs. A. B. Chivvis of Chatta ; nooga and C. E. Bassett, of Water- I bury, Conn., were among the vis j itors here Saturday. Mrs. J. S. Cleghorn, Miss Cleghorn and Mr. and Mrs. C. C. Cleghorn I made an automobile trip to Lafay- I ette Sunday to visit Mrs. Farlow Wardlaw who has been ill during the past week. The Woman’s Mission Society of the Baptist church will meet with Mrs. Minnie Rhlneheart at her res idence Thursday afternoon at 3 o’clock. The people we owe are pushing us. All notes and accounts due must be paid at once. TAYLOR & ESPY. I A protracted meeting will begin ! Sunday morning at 11 o’clock at the ' Presbyterain church. Rev. Jonas j Barclay, evangelist of Cherokee Pres- Ibytery, will do the preaching. All ' denominations are most cordially in vited to attend and help in winning souls for Christ. “DENTAL NOTICE” At Trion November 15th and 16th, At Menlo November 17th and 18th. T. S. BROWN. The State School Commissioner has given notice that there will be no state examination this fall or win ter. All teachers whose license ex pire this year and expect to teach and those who haven’t any certifi cate will have to take an emergency or special examination. S. E. JONES, C. S. C. Mr. B. H. Edmondson left Tues day for Atlanta to attend the meet -1 ing of the committee, which was appointed by the last leg islature to inspect the convict camps throughout the state. Mr. Edmond ■ son will visit a number of the camps iin South Georgia before returning j home. Please notice the label on your paper and see how much you are in arrears. This is the time when we expect our subscribers Ito pay us, so when you are in town drop in and settle with the : News. Cotton is bringing a good price and now is the time to lay up some thing for next year. Deposit your money in the Bank of Lyerly, where it is INSURED against loss from any cause. If you want to store your cotton and draw cash on it, carry it to the warehouse at Lyerly and the Bank will loan you money on it. All notes and accounts that are due will be put out for collection i if not paid at once. TAYLOR & ESPY. Carpenters are busily engaged in building a residence on the hill in West Summerville for Judge John-1 ston. We are glad to note the : probability that Mr. Johnston and family will become permanent resi dents of the town. •An exchange says they have invent ed a new kind of social amusement. It is called an "avoirdupois party." All the girls are weighed, and the . weight of each written on a piece i of paper and put in a hat, and the young men must draw. The young man must go to supper with the girl whose weight he draws, and must pay for her supper at\ one-half cent per pound. It is very exciting so far as the young men are concerned. SOUTH SUMMERVILLE Mr. and Mrs. J. N. Alexander spent Saturday and Sunday near La > fayette with the latter’s father, Rev. J. M. Coley. I Little Ray Hall is not improving I much this week. j Miss Sallie Harlow spent the j week end with Miss Ruth Espy in j Dry Valley. j Charley Parham and wife will move this week to Perennial where they : ; will make their future home. | Mrs. Hendon of Menlo was visiting ; relatives here first of the week. G. P. Mahan, wife and little son, i Farrow, spent Sunday near Raccoon with the former’s mother, Mrs. M. E. Mahan, who recently returned from an extended visit to friends and rel i atives in East Tennessee. j Gordon Bail and Lyle Johnson left ' Tuesday for Atlanta where they will ! spend a few days viewing the auto ; races. | T. N. Scoggins spent. Tuesday with I relatives near Trion. W. E. Bynum and wife were vis- I iting relatives near Trion Sunday. I Mrs. Dawson Alexander of Hall's Valley and Miss Nan Elsberry, of Trans were visiting here o<ne day last week. Mr. and Mrs. John Alexander of near Trion spent one day last week here with their daughter, Mrs. H. C. i Greeson. Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Dalton had as I their guests last Sunday Mr. ami [ Mrs. W. S. McClellan and little son. Albert Dalton, of Menlo. Visiting at H. A. Mathis’ Saturday and Sunday were his father and brother from Rome. Mrs. George Skene Dead. A ’phone message announced to l relatives here Monday morning thel death of Mrs. Alice Skene which oc curred Sunday night at her home near Gaylesville, Ala. Mrs. Skene was the youngest daugh ter of Mr. and Mrs. Frederick Rush, ' and was born and reared in Chero-1 kee county, Ala., She united with; the Baptist church at Demeris at an I ’ early age and was happliy married ; to Mr. George Skene about sixteen - years ago. Her life was spent in well doing. ' For several years prior to her marri age she was engaged in teaching and was well beloved by her pupils, I, After marriage her work was confin- 1 j ed to her home, where as a faithful 1 1 wife and devoted mother she exem- j plified the beauty of the Christian ! graces. During the many weary months | of her illness she was cheerful and. never complained of her lot, and when the close of her life was near, j she called her loved ones to her; bedside and talked with her husband j and each child, making the request \ that they meet her in Heaven. The funeral was conducted Tuesday j at Demeris church by Rev. J. N. Webb, her beloved pastor, by whom i she had been baptized and married, j The interment was in the Lawrence cemetery where rest, the remains of 11 loved ones gone before. She is survived by her devoted hus- 1 band and seven children who have the sympathy of many friends in j their sad bereavement. She leaves, also five sisters and ' two brothers, Mrs. J. R. Rhineheart; and Frank S. Rush, Gaylesville; I Mrs. J. W. Lawrence, Gadsden, Mrs. J. A. Smith, Lyerly; and Mrs T. K. Weathers, Mrs. Minnie Rhine heart and J. N. Rush, of this place. NOTICE. I will begin my school at. Penn ville next Monday, November 15th. Let every patron make a strenuous , effort to start their children the i first day and keep them in until the i last. LYDIA CURRY, Teacher. SIOO Reward, SIOO. The readers of this paper will be ; pleased to learn that there is at least one dreaded disease that science has been able to cure in all its stages, and that is Catarrh. Hall’s Catarrh Cure is the only positive cure now known to the medical fraternity. . Catarrh being a constitutional disease ! requires a constitutional treatment. Hall’s Catarrh Cure is taken inter nally, acting directly upon the blood and mucus surfaces of the system, thereby destroying the foundation of . the disease, and giving the patient I strength by building up the constitu- j : and assisting nature in doing its , . work. The proprietors have so much 1 faith in its curative powers that they offer One Hundred Dollars for any j csae that it fails to cure. Send for list of testimonials. Address, F. J. CHENY & CO., Toledo, O. Sold by Druggists, 75c. | Take Hall’s Family Pills for consti ! pation. WOOL WANTED We will pay the highest mar ket price for all the wool brought us. —Hinton & Co. : TAKE CARE OF YOUR STOCK I V A 1 i * Do not wait until your horse, mules, cows, hogs, | •t and sheep get sick to care for them. Feed them a lit t tie International Stock Food along with the other £ f Foods and nine times out of ten they will not get t * sick. But if they do happen to get sick, remember. g t we sell the best Vetinary Remedies on the market t j The kind that cure. The following list is some of | t the remedies we carry: X t i • ‘ 1 * * Dr. Daniels' Vetinary Colic Drops X This we guarantee to cure any T case of Colic in horse. We do J not charge one cent if it. fails. .J, We have known of many cures t and no failures. * Dr. Daniels’ Cough, Cold and * Fever Drops. * Dr. Daniels' Blister for Curbs, * Splints, etc. ? International Heave Cure. I International Worm Powders. T The Powder that gets the worms X every time. J International Gall Cure. j T Sloan’s Gall Cure. T Sloan’s Wart Cure. J £ International Poultry Powders, T the kind that keeps your poultry X healthy. I | We also prepare for you on short notice the Stock + f Powders known as thellarve Strain or Wesley Shrop- .f f shire formula. Call on us and tell us your troubles X and we will do the rest. ;; X Yours for Business, ;; i SUMMERVILLE DRUG CO. I t :: • • j H. D. MALLICOAT Dealer in | FRESH AND CURED MEATS I Soft Drinks, Tobacco and I II I Cigars. I «SK YOUR DEALER FOR A 'J,?'.' / , Z* h 'PIEDMONT (ft I* FUGGY / A Made In onopirade only __ "THE BEST.” / z 1 - E Built by expert*. Everylob fhlly z s' X gu.irant«< I. Huh all ibe latest f ” ** 1 > »* inn»rf»-. <;-uintf*. (Correspondence I V' '■ ■ ■*" 1 ; j solicited froxa live dealers. V 17 / /* ■ x /I PIZDMOHT BUCCY CO., Wk itanroe, N. C. tw y ** se/J /hem uljcrmer wo go; tlujy go wherever we tell thcin, I** 1 ** V J. M. GOOK Lyerly, Ga. —DEALER IN— ® Fresh Meats and Fancy Groceries | I will buy pork and pay 9 cents per pound, net I am going to sell bananas next Friday and Saturday for less than ever sold in Lyerly before. | J. M. COOK, Lyerly, Ga. LINIMENT. Sloan's Nerve and Bone Lini- X ment. £ Mexican Mustang Liniment. T Dr. Daniel's Oster Cocgus Lin- X iment, X Dr. Daniel's Wonder Worker T Liniment. T Interpational’s Silver Pine Heal- u. Ing Oil. X Porter's Antiseptic Healing Oil J Mansfield’s Magic Liniment. X Gunboat Caustic Balsam. T Planters' Cuban Oil. T “DISINFECTANT." T Pearson's Creolin, non-poison- X ous. X Black Draught. T Stock and Poultry Powders.